Thursday, December 18, 2008

I heart books!

I love books. I suppose this does not come as a great shock to you. And yet, after reading Barbara Vey's blog today, I feel like a little more explanation is required.
 
We moved...a lot...when I was kid. Every few years, my dad would receive a new call and we'd be off to a new town, new school, new everything. Often the only person I really knew in the entire school building was my little (not so much now) brother, and that was only when we were young enough to both be in elementary school. (We're four grades apart...well, we were when we were both in school). I wasn't the best or easiest new kid to befriend, either. I was, let's face it, weird, had absolutely no fashion sense and was prone to storytelling in the form of lying. (Hell, I could spin some wild ones--my brother being poisoned by cyanide is the one that springs to mind immediately--the only problem was when I inevitably got caught. Still, it was probably good practice, especially on the concept of willing suspension of disbelief.)
 
Books were what kept from me feeling too sad and too lonely. Familiar characters became friends, reliable ones who didn't care that I didn't have the latest charm for my plastic charm necklace (remember those?) or that I'd gone up to the blackboard (yep, I'm that old) with my zipper open or that I had no clue how to answer in math class when called upon.
 
Books were the ultimate comfort and escape hatch for me, the perpetually socially awkward one. They provided the chance to live other lives without abandoning my own.
 
In college, my then boyfriend, now husband, liked to tease me because I never went anywhere without a book. Once, we were in the grocery store and he spotted a book peeking out of my coat pocket. True, I had a legit reason. I was an English major and assigned to read more literary novels than any human being could possibly wade through (or want to wade through) in a semester. And yet, that wasn't entirely it. Books are the equivalent of a security blanket for me. If I'm trapped alone in an uncomfortable situation, I can always pull out a book and disappear for a few minutes. When I'm done, even if it's just a chapter or a few pages, I feel better, more grounded, more relaxed, better able to handle whatever is happening.
 
Flying is the perfect example. I hate flying. I like going places, but I HATE flying. It's a control thing, I know, but the truth of the matter is, it scares me. People read on planes because they're not allowed (at least, not for the entire flight) to run electronic devices. I read because I need desperately to be somewhere else for however long that flight lasts. This is why I always bring at least three books even on the shortest flights. One might not turn out to be the right match for my mood, and I'm a fast reader, so I need to have at least two in reserve.
 
When my uncle died unexpectedly a few years ago, it was a devastating shock. I would have to fly without my husband, who was traveling on business already, which meant I would be without the one person who tolerated my hand squeezing nervousness during takeoff and landing. Then, once I got there, it would a visitation and funeral for someone I loved.
 
Before we left, I went to the bookstore and bought--I remember this distinctly--$99 worth of new books. I was not taking any chances on running out. So, on that trip, at the end of the day, in my hotel room, when my eyes were red and swollen from crying and my whole body ached with grief (not just for my own loss, but for my family's loss as well), I curled up in bed with a book. And for those few minutes when I was reading, I got the teensiest bit of relief, a little escape, which helped me make it through. Everyone has their coping mechanism; that was mine.
 
I'm grateful to all the authors who have provided those comforting escapes through their stories. And I hope, one day, that one of my books will do the same for someone else.
 
 

Monday, December 15, 2008

New Foster Dog, Pansy

Okay, is she not completely adorable?

Friday, December 12, 2008

Pride and Prejudice--Facebook Style

For all fans of Pride and Prejudice, this is a retelling of the story as it would look through Facebook updates. I love it!
 

Wednesday, December 10, 2008

My girl crush. :)

 
 
Bsg_poster
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Okay, I swiped this from Maureen Ryan's blog on the Chicago Trib. It's a poster, featuring Starbuck, promoting the final episodes of Battlestar Galactica. I LOVE Katee Sackhoff as Starbuck.

Sunday, December 07, 2008

You know you're a pastor's kid when...

1) You take a secret delight in attending church in jeans instead of "a nice church outfit."
 
2) You take a secret delight in being anonymous within a congregation for the first time in your life, knowing that you do not stand out anymore than any of the other parishoners and therefore are not held up as example or cautionary tale (see #1).
 
3) You have favorite hymns and read ahead in the bulletin to see if any of them are listed.
 
4) You are disappointed when one of your favorite hymns is listed as one of the last to be played during communion because you know there's never enough people taking communion to stretch the music out that long.
 
5) You hum (or sing along under your breath, if you're not thinking) the pastor's part of the liturgy because, hey, you know it by heart.
 
6) You have a strong preference for either the green book or the red book (green book all the way, baby!) (This is probably specifically part of being an ELCA-pastor's kid.)
 
7) You know, without looking, that hymns numbered above 600 are in the "blue book," also known as WOV and yes, you know what that means. (Yep, this is probably ELCA too.)
 
8) You know, again without looking, what color the altar cloth should be during Advent.
 
9) You have eaten more than your fair share of potluck dinners, which likely included dishes with the word "funeral" in them. (e.g. Funeral Potatos, Funeral Chicken, etc.)
 
10) You know exactly how far the pastor can see out into the congregation...and yes, he CAN see you all the way in the back whispering, falling asleep, writing out your grocery list, and filling out the offering check during the sermon. (You're also relieved that you're not going to get in trouble for it over lunch anymore..unless you still attend your dad--or mom's--church!)
 
What else? Any thoughts, Beck, Susan, any other PKs out there?
 
 

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Bitter Pill on the shelves!


How cool is this? :-) My local Barnes and Noble (Vernon Hills, IL) coming through for me.

Book recommendations

Just finished The Dead and The Gone by Susan Beth Pfeffer on audio book, which I swear should not be allowed as I got so sucked in that I would, at times, look up and be startled at exactly how far I'd traveled. Yes, it is YA, but it is worth reading/listening to for all ages. This is related to the book Life As We Knew It by the same author, which I think I recommended earlier. Asteroid hits the moon and moves it too close to the Earth. Life is forever changed. Food shortages, flu epidemics, the dead piling up on the streets.
 
Very intense but excellent stories. Both books cover the same events but from two different people/perspectives.
 
I also finished The Adoration of Jenna Fox, which was interesting as well, but a completely different style. This was, however, the first audio book I could stand with a female narrator. Some of the others I've tried were so grating, but this woman--Jenna Lamia, I believe--did a great job.

Why do I live here again?

Florida...California...Hawaii...
 
Nope, I chose Illinois. Land of bitter cold temperatures and eight months (well, okay maybe less, but it FEELS like it) of car scraping, driveway shoveling, and general cold weather misery. Lovely.

Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Sarah Connor Chronicles: Strange Things Happen at the One-Two Point

If you haven't watched yet, don't read on but...
 
:
:
:
:
 
I KNEW it. I called it. Well, okay, not really, but it did always strike me as odd how Riley approached John. I just couldn't figure out how the machines were involved. And, of course, as we found out last night, they're not. But Riley is still a liar and TROUBLE. I'm intrigued by the fact that she's from the future and sort of being shoved (by Jesse) toward John. I mean, the John she would know, if she knows him at all, would be in his forties. How mind-twisty is that? I did not get the impression last night that Riley was particularly thrilled with her assignment either. I wonder what they said to her to make her go along with this plan. Was it, "We need you to seduce John Connor to save us all"? Or "Hey, come with me and you'll get to the mall before it was a work camp"?  
 
But this brings up all those interesting points made over at TWOP about there being signs of a division both on the human side and the machine side. Some of the humans aren't so sure John's got it all together anymore. Some of the machines are thinking maybe they shouldn't wipe everyone out. Shades of BSG, if you ask me. A story is far more interesting when you cannot tell who the "good" guys are from the "bad" guys. Or, if they are really taking a page from BSG, everyone will turn out to be a little of both.
 
I am supremely happy that Cameron is turning out to be a central part of the equation rather than just a handy, nearly indestructible nursemaid/love interest for John. Gives her, as I've said before, more skin in the game, so to speak. And she is, due to some combination of writing and Summer Glau's amazing ability to convey freaky machineness with something other, completely un-pin-down-able. I cannot figure out what her end game is...and I love that.
 
I do hope they're going to be allowed to finish out the season, at least. I need to know how this is going to turn out. Was it a mistake for Derek to confess that he's John's uncle? Does he really trust her now? I know we're supposed to think he does (hence the whole toothbrush story--someone on the writing staff obviously really has issues with sharing toothbrushes because Derek got busted using Sarah's last year, remember?), but I SO get the sense that Derek would not be surprised by her betrayal. One of the things I like about that character (and I'm both shocked and pleased that BAG continually pulls it off) is that he's so damaged and cynical. Never imagined that the actor who played David Silver would have that capacity. Thank goodness my small mindedness in this respect was not shared by others in charge of the show. He's fantastic!

Friday, November 21, 2008

Such a girly thing...but I can't wait.

I read Twilight back in 2005, I think, right when it first came out. Loaned it to my sister, who was, at the time, still in high school. We both agreed we loved it. My mom read it last summer at my sister's encouragement.
 
Here's a fun article from Time about why this book (and hopefully, the movie as well) works. I'm trying to organize a Twilight-movie outing over Thanksgiving break with my mom, my sister and me. And my sister-in-law as well, if she's interested--though I know she wants to read the book first. The guys can stay at home and watch football! :)

Thursday, November 20, 2008

National Buy A Book Day (Credit to Barbara Vey)

It's no big surprise to anyone that the economy sucks. Occasionally, I wish I could find a rock large enough to hide under so I wouldn't be quite so aware of this.
 
Publishing, once thought to be recession proof (ha, like the idiots who called Titanic unsinkable, most likely--if we learn nothing else, can we please acknowledge now that NOTHING is recession proof?), is struggling along with everyone else. October was a bad, bad month. Layoffs, publishers closing, horrible quarterly results, etc. 
 
I bring this up because Linnea Sinclair sent me a link to a blog that not only explained why this is the case but also gave us a way to do something about it.  How refreshing. Not just a rehashing of what exactly is screwed up and how terrible it is, but a way to feel like you're doing something to make it better.
 
And it's simple, really. If you love books, buy a book this week. I know we're all watching our budgets very closely. Myself included. I was a three or four book a week junkie, and right now, I'm hitting the library so hard I actually had to change libraries (long story) to get more selection. But I'm buying a book this week. (I'm so excited--it's been so long!) Doesn't even matter what kind, just buy a book.
 
If you find it hard to buy a book for yourself, buy a book for a holiday gift.  Nothing says Happy Holidays like a hardcover! :)
 
I want publishers to be able to continue taking risks on new authors and not just for my own selfish purposes, either. I love nothing more than discovering a new voice, a new name to seek out on the shelves.
 
Also, check out Barbara Vey's blog, About Her Book, which focuses on this topic today as well.  
 
 
 

Friday, November 07, 2008

From my rescue organization...but what's funny is I thought the same thing!




Okay, if this works, you'll see an Obama poster with greyhounds above. If not, then you probably won't see it because I'll delete it and try again!

Tuesday, November 04, 2008

Watching the results, Sarah Connor Chronicles, random stuff...

Am sick, but I'm laying (lying? Was never good at that one) here on the couch, laptop on my lap and watching the results come in. This is very cool, watching history happen no matter which way this turns out. This is officially the first time I've ever cared enough about an election to be multi-media about it. I'm watching on television and checking the live blog on Time.com. The entertainment blogger, James Poniewozik, is contributing to the blog, and I look forward to reading his blog, Tuned In, every day. He's cracking me up in the live blog as well!
 
In other news...did anybody think Sarah Connor Chronicles was kind of lame last night? I love this show with a fervor generally reserved for Battlestar Galactica, especially those with a Kara/Lee storyline, but last night just seemed...eh. And I swear, I'm not saying that just because Riley was in it. I don't like this Jessie storyline for Derek. It's irritating me because it's so clear that she's up to no good. I'm hoping Derek is just playing along or I'm going to lose faith in him. Also, virtually no Cameron/John scenes. I miss those. The Ellison story is finally getting a little interesting, I think.
 
Shirley Manson is doing quite well, I think, at portraying a machine. Even her motions are clipped and mechanical. Awesome!
 
Best line from Cameron: "Nobody likes a nag." Hee.
 
Other stuff...listening to my first audio book--The Rules of Survival by Nancy Werlin--from the library. It was frustrating at first because it was so SLOW, but then I put it in the CD player again on my way home and found you just have to adjust to being read to instead of reading to yourself (which happens much faster usually). Any books you all particularly recommend as audio books?
 
I'm also excited that one of my favorite YA authors and fellow Chicagoan, Simone Elkeles, has a new book, Perfect Chemistry, coming out next month!
 
Okay, done rambling for now...more later!
:) Stacey

Sunday, November 02, 2008

Have to share a dog picture...

Walker, chilling out in my writing room on a Sunday afternoon. His balance is remarkable, isn't it?
 
(Not sure if this will work as this is a photo from my phone, but we're giving it a try!)

Monday, October 27, 2008

NaNoWriMo (National Novel Writing Month)

NaNoWriMo starts this Friday at 12:01 a.m., I believe. Technically, it's early Saturday, November 1. For those of you who are not familiar with the concept, it's a bunch of writers who get together (online) and vow to write 50,000 words by the end of November. It works out to about 1,500 - 2,000 words per day. If you assume 300 words per page, it's about five or six pages (in standard manuscript formatting i.e. double space, one inch margins, etc.) per day.
 
I've never participated in NaNoWriMo before. I told myself it was because I didn't need to. I had the motivation to write. And I do. However, I also spend massive amounts of time wallowing in indecision, trying to work through road blocks, eight different ways to Sunday before finally landing on an approach. With NaNoWriMo, you don't have that luxury. I think that restriction might be helpful.
 
Generally speaking, my best experience has been the time I did not allow myself to get "stuck." For the Ghost and the Goth, when I ran into a scene where I didn't know what happened, I forced myself to jump ahead to the next scene I saw in my head.
 
NaNoWriMo works with my natural tendency to write a rough first draft, albeit the pace is a little faster than what I'm used to. When I'm into a book, I usually write at least a page every day and then three or four pages on Saturday and Sunday. But I can usually get a first draft done in three months, and if I push it, I can get it up to final draft state in another month. So, clearly some days I'm writing more than my goal.
 
So, why, Stacey, the reluctance I hear/read in your voice?
 
I don't know. I've never done this before, written to a specific deadline. However, I know that will be part of my future. I think one of the reasons Linnea is so darn prolific is she's used to writing under deadline, thanks to her years as a journalist.  (And yes, I did spend the better part of a decade as a corporate copywriter, but it's way easier to churn out stuff when your name isn't going to be on it.)
 
I'm worried that trying to write so quickly will force me to churn out a pile of crap. And yet, that is the point of Anne Lamott's advice, "Write a sh*tty first draft." The point being that if you free yourself up, you'll discover things you might never have found otherwise and at least at the end you'll have something to work with rather than a blank screen. To paraphrase Edison, I'll have found at least one way NOT to write that particular story.
 
The obssessive compulsive side of me (oh, yes, shocking, I know...) is freaking out about not making the deadline. 50,000 words in 30 days. There is no prize or anything. It's just about reaching the goal. And I'm never that tough on myself about goals because they have to be flexible and realistic for life. But I DO not like failing. Period.
 
And yet, conversely, that very thing would be what motivates me to keep writing even when I really want to go watch a re-run of Family Guy.
 
Hmmm.
 
Still thinking about it. Anyone else out there participating in NaNoWriMo?
 
 
 

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Oh, look! Shiny. :)

This always happens to me. I'm supposed to be working on one thing, but the pristine condition of an untouched, untapped idea is calling to me.

I. Must. Resist.

The hardest part about writing is staying focused. And when you're faced with something you don't know how to get around--how to get started, how to write a particular scene, how to handle a character's issues--other stories start singing the siren's song.

It's not that I don't love the current story, the one I'm supposed to be working on. It's just...the other one is still in this vague, perfect-because-it-hasn't-been-proven-not-to-be-yet stage. When you're up close with an idea, dealing with its flaws, and you're elbows deep in the structure, all the other ideas waiting in the wings seem...easier. Better.

But alas, it is an illusion. For all stories need work, love and care. Some come easier than others, true. Some make you bleed for every word. But whether it's easy or difficult in the writing of it doesn't seem to affect the quality of the story in the end. What will affect the quality is whether I'm willing to put the requisite work in.

I am. After I'm done whining. *sigh*

: ) Stacey

Saturday, October 18, 2008

Experimenting with settings...

Hey, just a heads up, I'm playing around with trying to get Twitter to show up on the sidebar here, so things may look different or go a bit wonky...

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Feels Like Home To Me...

As always, we had a great time at Valpo Homecoming. I never really thought about the meaning of the word "homecoming" until after I graduated from college. In high school, it was just an excuse to get dressed up and go to a dance. In college, it was a good excuse for a party! But now, 11 years, after graduating, I get it.

I still feel like I'm coming home when I get to campus. It's changed a lot since I was in school there. There are at least three new buildings and fewer old buildings (Goodbye, Baldwin Hall with your narrow stairways and musty air--I could easily imagine girls in poodle skirts and short neck scarves in those classrooms. Something about the design, shape and smell spoke to it being from a different era.)

In contrast, visiting my sister's dorm room was like stumbling into a miniature Best Buy. Televisions, DVD players, iPods, and THREE laptops. Not sound all old-school, but when I was at Valpo, laptops were near unheard of. You were lucky if you had a computer at all, and most of us spent our days camped out in the computer labs, praying that our 3.5" floppy disks wouldn't fail on us when we needed them most. (I once lost an entire paper because my boyfriend, now my husband, borrowed my disk and left it in the frigid car overnight). We printed out on dot matrix printers and then wasted another five minutes or so peeling the perforated strips off the side!


But we had so much fun. I loved being a part of a community like that, with friends who became family.

So...in honor of that:

Me, with flat hair and no make-up, at my favorite computer in the computer lab, scrambling to get yet another paper done. (Yeah, I know it's sideways--you know I have issues with this. :) )




Our dorm room, circa sophomore year, 1994.





This is what I miss--everyone hanging out together! (I'm guessing Deb took this photo, which is why she's not in it. I owe most of the photographic evidence of college to her diligence and skill with a camera.)



My baby sister with me on graduation day, 1997. She's now a sophomore at Valpo, and we walked in this same area this weekend to pick up the birthday cake my mom sent through the Guild.

Wednesday, October 08, 2008

Google--first in the fight to stop drunk emailing...

 
I personally have never succumbed to this temptation. Mainly because when I've been THAT drunk (which has been very rare in my life, indeed), I'm usually laying on a couch somewhere sleeping or...giggling. The very last thought on my alcohol-soaked mind would be to get up and turn the computer on. No, no, I prefer the more tried and true version of humiliating myself in person. 
 
However, that being said, I'm intrigued by the story implications of this, if this practice became wide spread. True, you can shut Mail Goggles off, but that involves going into your account settings, etc. And when you need to send that urgent email (in a story) to let someone know who the murderer (evil alien/cult leader/etc.) is, you have to stop and solve math problems? That would be awesome! :)
 
Also, P.S. I'm not good at math when completely and utterly sober, so I'd probably never beat what appears to be a time limit on solving the Mail Goggles math problems. What about some word problems? You know, "An eight letter word for "'atmosphere'" or something. That could work, right? 
 
: ) Stacey  

Tuesday, October 07, 2008

Catching up, Allison from Palmdale and more...

I haven't disappeared. Just having trouble keeping up! To show you exactly how busy I've been, I must tell you that I haven't even watched Sarah Connor Chronicles from last night! And as far as I'm concerned, that's the only reason to get out of bed on Monday. : )
 
Regarding Allison from Palmdale, last week's episode, I'm thinking that many of you guessed, as I did, that Cameron was based on a real person. However, this raises all kinds of interesting questions about Allison's relationship with John versus Cameron's relationship with John in the future. Who was he in love with? Because you kind of have to assume it's one (or both) of them. Also, how old would that make Allison? Sixteen years younger than John, right? That could be kind of oooky, depending on how old she is/was when we saw her in the interrogation room with Cameron.
 
Den of Geek noted that the necklace Jody wore and gave to Cameron is the one that Allison in the future is wearing. So...does that mean Cameron gives the necklace to John to give to Allison in the future? I haven't verified this for myself--did anyone else notice this? It sort of makes my brain hurt to think about the timeline on that.
 
I have two ideas for the sequel to G&G. And I've been working on writing up a synopsis for both. Hence my absence. One is done--yea! Needs minor revisions. The other I'm still struggling with, but I hope to have it finished soon. In the meantime, I can give you weird stories to read like this: "Reborn" babies. This has science fiction possibilities written all over it!
 
More later...
:) Stacey
 
P.S. If you're on Twitter, I do a much better job updating on a daily basis. Here's my page...

Tuesday, September 30, 2008

Designer babies

Designer babies...Yep, we've been talking about it for ages, but it seems like we're getting closer everyday. The process itself doesn't freak me out as much as the people we might inadvertently weed out because of the potential for disease or bad eyesight or something. Bill Gates pops to mind--probably because of all those damn Windows/PC commercials they're running now--though I'm sure there are others that are far less debatable. Like him or not, you must admit the world would be a different place without the advances he made.
 
Then again, I mean, if you believe that everything happens for a reason, then you would believe that we've arrived at this point in technology and there's a reason for it.
 
It's more interesting to me to think about what kind of society would be created if we could control the creation of the next generation. Then, not only would have teenagers moping about not having enough money or a car, but also that you didn't spend enough to give them the "good genes." Interesting, right? The gap between the rich and the poor would only be furthered by this process. You might be lucky and hit the genetic lotto naturally--intelligence, good eyesight, no major diseases, athletic ability, etc. But if everyone who has money is guaranteed those qualities, eeesh. The ability to climb up in the world, to get ahead, might only become that much harder. At the very least, the "natural" ones will face much stiffer competition for jobs, spouses, etc.
 
Or am I looking at this the wrong way? Is this just the next phase of "survival of the fittest"?
 
For those who are interested, Gattaca covers this ground pretty well. Children of Men kind of takes a different approach on a related path--our fertility as a species seems to be declining (which may have more to do with more news about the subject and people's willingness to talk about such things now than an actual scientific trend). Will our choices make us extinct? What if the desire to have a "perfect" baby leads to no babies? That's not really the plot of Children of Men, but it's an interesting kind of twist.
 
: ) Stacey, a redhead (a hair color that results from a genetic mutuation and will be virtually non-existent in the next 100 years, according to scientists) with pale skin, extremely poor eyesight and NO athletic ability. Thank God my parents weren't picky!

Monday, September 29, 2008

Chicago Area Writers--Plot class at College of Lake County

I'm notoriously bad at posting to let people know when I'm teaching, so I'm trying to do this ahead of time. I'm teaching a Saturday class on plot at the College of Lake County in Grayslake, IL on October 18, 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. A description of the class is below, and here's a link to the CLC catalog. Class is listed on page 23.
 

PLOT IS A FOUR-LETTER WORD

It's a great story. You've developed it in

your mind from beginning to end. But

when your fingers hit the computer keys,

the plot just doesn't flow. It's difficult to get

the characters from one scene to another.

The dialogue seems stilted and the action appears

contrived. Never fear! Join author Stacey Klemstein as she demystifies

the concept of plot and breaks it down into more easily manageable

pieces. Writers will leave with tips, tricks and tools to help

create more interesting characters and a stronger storyline.

Cost: $59.00

4308 CWRT 18-001 0900A-0300 S GLC E124 10/18 10/18 KLEMSTEIN

My weekend project and other random musings...

Okay, so somewhere in this post (I'm posting via email, so I'm not quite sure) there will be a picture of my writing room with the newly installed blinds I put in yesterday. By MYSELF. With only a few panicked phone calls to a friend who did not laugh when I asked about using a drill bit that was THREE times the size of the one mentioned in the instructions. Yeah.
 
I not only found the other drill bits but also remembered from sixth grade wood shop how to change them out. Dude. I am so proud.
 
(Tangent: the power drill has long been my nemesis. In sixth grade, when we lived in Hillsboro, IL, I was forced to take wood shop. I also had to take home ec and hated that almost as much, but nothing traumatic occurred there...other than being forced to, you know, cook. I was terrified of the jig saw, among other things. I just think power tools and 11 year olds are a bad combination.
 
Anyway, on some project, can't remember which one, I had to use a power drill. I picked one up that someone had been using and the bottom, where the cord attached, was super hot. Instinct took over--you let go of something that hot. But it had also been drilled--no pun intended--into our heads that if we broke a tool, we'd have to pay for it. So I grabbed for the falling drill. Brilliant, right?
 
Caught it by the drill bit, which cut into the vulnerable space between my ring and little finger--you know that little webbing area? Not a deep cut or anything, but enough that there was blood. I am NOT good with blood. Didn't really know that at the time, though.
 
Someone saw me and told the teacher. And this was the worst part. He sprayed my hand with this bright green antiseptic stuff. It made it hurt worse, and it smelled like a hospital.
 
Shortly after that I started seeing little white spots out of the corner of my eyes. Thought I had wood shavings in my safety glasses. Nope, I was in the first stage of fainting...or more likely, now that I know myself a bit better, the midst of a panic attack triggered first by the fear of dropping the drill, then the cut on my hand and the blood, and the embarrassment of everyone staring at me. 
 
Yeah. The spots got worse and near fainting ensued. Two girls had to help carry me from class to the office. Uh-huh, that worked wonders for my reputation, let me tell you.
 
But now, twenty some years later, I have triumphed and used the power drill without incident!)  
 
Other things...watched the fourth (?) episode of True Blood, this one not written by Alan Ball, and as predicted by various critics, I think I did like it better than the previous three. Bill seemed to have a bit more personality. Pam, one of my favorite characters in the books, was awesome. Hilarious, in fact. "In the vault" indeed.
 
As always, those who are acting vampire-y always seem a bit too campy (is that possible?). Long Shadow, an interesting character in the book, sort of seemed kind of laughable with his posturing and his fangs. And if they follow the book, he should seem to be at least a threat. But others, like the Taryn chick who took the tourist to the bathroom to, um, snack on, were scary. Can't figure out it if depends on the actor, the direction or just me at a particular moment.
 
Eric was fabulous. Younger than what I pictured in my head, but with the accent..um, yeah. Wow.
 
I've been reading this series of books for years now, and it's been kind of fun seeing the story in a different medium. I like Anna Paquin as Sookie. The actor playing her brother is perfect. Even Tara, whose role is VERY different from that in the book, I enjoy.
 
Yeah, I procrastinated a lot this weekend. But it was fun and relatively productive!
 
: ) Stacey

Friday, September 26, 2008

Recognizing the supreme awesomeness of this exact moment in time...

Okay, I know this won't make sense to most you out there (except Stacy G. because she knows me all too well), but today I had one of those (incredibly rare) moments where I actually recognize the supreme awesomeness of what has happened in the last six months and get a bit giddy over it.
 
After five years of off and on again querying, I found a fabulous agent who loved and believed in my book enough to sign me!
 
Laura Bradford, said fabulous agent, sold my YA book to Hyperion to an editor who really seems to like it!
 
After ten or so years of off and on again trying, I will be New York published. Very cool.
 
And here's the best part: I get to write more YA...and likely get paid for it!
 
For those who think I might be glorying in this a bit too much, let me tell you...writers, in general, can be a rather morose and anxiety-driven bunch. I mean, there's a reason we're driven to create whole other worlds into which we can escape. I'm not just worst-case-scenario girl, I'm the awake-at-three-am-calculating-the-odds-that-my-weird-stomach-pain-is-the-Ebola-virus girl. My glass is not only half empty, but it has a serious and fatal leak somewhere (probably).
 
So, I'm celebrating this EXACT moment and the joy that it brings me in defiance of all that I am normally. (Trust me, it's only a momentary blip, and all too soon, we'll be back to our regularly scheduled programming of sweaty panic attacks and general gnashing of teeth.)
 
: )  
 
 

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Twitter

For those of you who are Twitter-ing too, let me know. I'm StaceyKlemstein on Twitter.
 
It's so much fun! Kind of goofy and interesting how much information you can get and give in just those few sentences. I see why people do this.

Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Random thought for the day

I was weird kid. Not that this should come as any shock to you. But it recently occurred to me that one of the many awesome things about iPods is that they provide you with that background soundtrack to your life that has been missing up this point. You know, I always wanted heroic music to play when I was attempting something difficult. Now I can make it happen. And because the iPod tucks into your pocket and the earbuds (though painful and not awesome) are so tiny and discreet, it's about as close as you can get to having John Williams following you around, you know?

ETA: I'm an idiot for posting without actually reading what I wrote. Sorry for the typos. Most of them have been captured safely and returned to the wild.

Tuesday, September 23, 2008

A post about something other than television...

Believe it or not, I am actually working on something. I'm just at the "flail-around and make a big mess" stage of writing the sequel to Ghost and the Goth. I actually hate this part. I love writing first drafts, but only once I've got that hook. That "oh, yeah, I can't WAIT to see what happens with this" feeling in the pit of my stomach. Other writers have compared it to reaching the top of that first hill on a roller coaster ride, when all the fun is in front of you, and you're anticipating the thrill but also a little scared. 
 
I'm not there yet. I'm still playing. Interviewing characters. Talking to people. My weekend at Linnea's really helped me find some mile markers, but it's all still mush in my head. Still simmering on the back burner. Dude, could I mix just one more metaphor in this post? Sheesh. I haven't gotten the "a-ha" yet, where everything snaps together and suddenly, you've got soup instead of random floating ingredients in some lukewarm water. 
 
Ugh. I hate this part. I remember this with the start of Eye of The Beholder too. There are just so many ways to go, so many options to try. Some of them only a little different than the others, but enough so that it can shift the whole thing from "working" to "not working." And it was a little easier with EOB because I hadn't closed things off quite as much.
 
Now I've got to go back and look at things, peel back the layers, figure out how to open the story threads again without making the end of G&G seem false.
 
The only solution is to keep working at it, keep chipping away it (that's like, what, metaphor number six, seven?). It will eventually come together. It always does. It's just a matter of how crazy it will make me in the getting there, you know?
 
Oh, hey, fabulous book I read on the plane home from Ohio, Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins. I'd been hearing about it on PW and I think even Stephen King wrote in praise of it. It's truly, truly excellent. Worth the hardcover prices, in my opinion. First chapter is up on Amazon at the link above.
 
: ) Stacey

Sarah Connor Chronicles: Mousetrap

Don't really have much on this episode except a couple of questions. I'm confused a little about where the Connor/Reese household is, at the moment. John obviously started a new school in the previous episode, hence the meeting of Riley, right? So, are they just in a different part of the Los Angeles area? Must be.
 
Also, where did all the money come from? Up to this point, they've been living in kind of crappy houses, driving rather beat-up vehicles. Now they're living in a very nice (rental) home with some not cheap furnishings. (Damn, I'd hate to be the homeowners returning to live there after Sarah and Company leave. Blood is just so hard to get out of the upholstery. : ) ) And they're driving what appears to be a brand-new Dodge Ram (which I'm sure is a sponsorship thing) and loading up new computer equipment without even blinking at what that will do to their funds. Was there a sudden lotto win that I am not aware of?  
 
One could assume that because they didn't have to pay Sarkissian (spelling?) for the Turk, they've got that money to spare. Or perhaps Derek has access to some additional funds and now that he's living there, they've combined their resources? For all I know, they stole the new truck, I guess. But I just wish there was a little bit of an explanation. It just seems too sudden a shift in socio-economic standards.
 
This leads me to my other point...where is Derek? I mean, seriously, they bump the guy up to being a regular and he only gets a couple of lines per episode? That's less of a role than when he was a guest star. Believe it or not, I actually like Brian Austin Green as Derek. In fact, one of my favorite moments last night, harsh though it was, was when Derek kind of whapped Charlie with his own phone, reminding him to make sure it was really Charlie's kidnapped wife on the phone and not a Terminator imitating her.
 
Moments like that, you remember that Derek doesn't have much softness, much give left in him, except, it seems, when it comes to John. He's seen and done way too much. I LIKE that. I want more. I hope that they're saving him for a big part of the storyline later. I just hope the show is on the air long enough to get there. Anybody know how it's doing?
 
One thing I did like last night was that we, the audience, figured it out just a few minutes before Sarah did. I mean, I knew the Terminator deliberately left Charlie's wife near her phone. He knew she'd call for help, but he didn't want to make it seem too obvious that it was a trap or she might have tried to warn them off. And I was following the logic of leaving John behind because the Cromartie would expect them to bring him so as not to leave him undefended.
 
But as soon as Charlie came back in, carrying the wires that Cromartie had torn from their car, I knew he'd led them there to get them out of the way. And I'm probably one of the last ones that caught on, but I like it when I figure it out just a second or two before the characters do. It's good writing, in my opinion, if/when that happens. Not so far in advance that I get bored, waiting for them to figure it out, but not so late that I'm a little lost as to how they reached a certain conclusion and it feels like the writers cheated to move the plot forward.
 
Other thoughts:
Figured Charlie's wife (can't remember her name) was toast. Interesting, though, that it was not the Terminator directly who killed her. More the whole situation, and her desire to show her husband that she was strong like Sarah, in my opinion. I suspect we'll be seeing more of Charlie, at least for a little while. Wonder if they're setting up a potential love triangle or at least a conflict of interest that involves Derek, Charlie and Sarah.
 
Cameron's still acting like she's got a screw or three loose. Don't mind the weirdness of her talking about the house moving. That was kind of funny and once again, I like the interaction of John and Cameron. Kind of worried about her wanting to kill the bird. Not sure where that comes from. Terminators, I thought, killed to accomplish their mission (and eliminate obstacles to the mission), but this potential for random bird violence is rather off-putting. I suspect it's supposed to be.
 
I also don't like that John had to remind Cameron that she needed to have "help" with the heavy computer boxes. I know it's supposed to be showing she's still broken. I get it, but I also don't like that she's seeming less efficient at pretending to be human. That signifies larger damage, I think. Not good. And I want to like Cameron, damaged or not.
 
On a related note, I liked Riley in last week's episode. She is the normalcy John thinks he needs/wants. Did NOT like her getting all bully-ish with John and claiming not to be afraid of his mother, like he so obviously was. Though, it did amuse me because I thought if there was ever a mom to be scared of, it would be Sarah Connor.
 
Hmm. Thought this was going to be a short post...Thoughts, ruminations? Am I taking this way too seriously? : )
 
 
 
 

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Sarah Connor Chronicles: Automatic for the People

First, a disclaimer...I know that every episode cannot focus on the weird and changing dynamic between Cameron and John. It would get old really fast. That being said, I must confess those episodes are likely going to be my favorites and others will pale in comparison.
 
In this episode, I like that the trend of John making his own (probably foolish) decisions continues. Part of the fun of this is now trying to figure out which one is going to bite him/them all in the end. Is it saving Cameron? Trying to lead a normal life? There will be some fallout (no pun intended) from one of his decisions, and I like it because now I'm watching to see which one it's going to be.
 
I think stepping away from his mother and making his own decisions (and learning from his mistakes) is going to be a vital part of making him into a leader. And I think Sarah and Derek must know that. They can't shelter him forever, or he'll never learn to be the leader they need. This is not to say he is, in any way, shape or form, that leader yet. Sarah is walking that knife's edge of letting him make mistakes and trying to keep him from getting himself (and the rest of us) killed. That will keep me watching.
 
The whole story surrounding the nuclear power plant was a bit...meh. I understand it's vital for the resistance in the future, but this whole concept of sending various people back from the future with missions for Sarah and company that MUST be accomplished strikes me as forced. A barely disguised plot device. If you can send that many people back, why not send more help for John and Sarah? Of course, dying guy did seem to scrawl a whole bunch of stuff on the wall, so maybe he will be the only plot device visitor this season.
 
I hate watching Sarah worry about cancer, mainly because that's just a little too close to things that can happen in real life. Though, I did enjoy Cameron's response to her when she, Sarah, said something about being a time bomb, waiting to go off (or something like that). Essentially, Cameron said that's what we all are. We don't know what's going to happen or when. For someone like Sarah who lives her whole life based on knowledge from the future, that must have been incredibly frustrating and yet a good reminder.  
 
I'm intrigued by Riley, the girl at school who approaches John. I keep thinking of this interview I read with Jeffrey Donovan, the guy who plays the spy Michael Westen on Burn Notice. He said that in doing research about spies, the hardest thing for him to to wrap his brain around was that you couldn't ever trust anyone who approached you. Anyone who ever made overtures of friendship, romantic interest, whatever. You could never be sure about their motives, so you couldn't be friends, lovers, even business associates. Think about how many people that would eliminate in your life.
 
I'm just not so sure about this girl. She is so blatantly normal. So very much want John wants right now. A normal girlfriend. A normal life. So...I see this going one of two ways. A) she's a set up of some kind, getting close to John to be able to hurt him--doubtful, given that's sort of the whole Cameron thing (an interested girl turns out to be a robot). Though, if you have one Terminator model that looks like a sixteen year old girl, why not others?  It was kind of a weird moment when she built that robot out of Legos "to protect you while you sleep," but it also could have been nothing.
 
More likely, B) she's cannon fodder.
 
In writing, you have to hurt your characters and the best way to do that is to give them something they want desperately and then yank it away. I can easily see Cromartie (spelling?) finding her and trying to use her to get to John, to the point of killing her. Cold-blooded as it sounds, it will also serve the purpose of strengthening his resolve to win this war.
 
Now...as always, my favorites were the few Cameron and John moments. The first where she tells him she can't trust him anymore because he didn't destroy her. Okay, I can almost get that. Except is she not capable of destroying herself or requesting destruction if the situation warrants it? Isn't that how T2 ends? I'm not suggesting that she should be destroyed. It's far more interesting with her around. But I find it worth noting that she did NOT say anything like this when she was still in the car in the junkyard, covered with that flammable powder stuff. Theories?
 
And finally, when John asks her about what she said, about not being able to be trusted. I held my breath when he started that line, ("What you said before...") because I thought he was going to ask her about what she said when she was pinned between those trucks. Anybody else think that? I mean, wouldn't you ask about it? Yeah, I guess he could have written it off to the trick that it probably was, and maybe it would be humiliating to admit that you wondered, even for a second, if it might be real. Okay, yeah, I see that.
 
As for him telling her that he doesn't have to prove himself to her, that smacked way more of hurt and betrayal than anything else. I think she hurt him when she used his feelings against him. And yet that didn't stop him from saving her. Hmmm. I just don't know what to make of all this, but I can't wait to see more!
 
: ) Stacey
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Tuesday, September 09, 2008

Sarah Connor Chronicles: Samson and Delilah :) Loooooong post…sorry.

Yesterday, despite having the aforementioned splitting headache, I piled myself into bed, surrounded myself with lots of pillows, Alka-Seltzer Plus Cold, and all the remotes to watch Sarah Connor Chronicles.

Okay, so don't read on if you haven't watched yet…

So far, one episode into the second season, and it is BETTER than last year. As you know, I'm watching this not just to make sure the world stays safe from the machines, but also to find out what Derek Reese's secret(s) is/are, whether Sarah is going to fall for him in any way shape or manner (or is that too weird?), and what are they going to do with John and Cameron?

As a devotee of the forbidden love genre, I'm DYING for them to get to the "I have feelings but I can't do anything about it because it's wrong and possibly weird" stage.

I've been rewatching the first two Buffy seasons and figured out that was my favorite part, the back and forth with Angel and Buffy.

Of course, my beef with that show is they did not figure out a way to give them a happily ever after without destroying the show. Hence, no happily ever after, or HEA, as they say in the romance writing business. It is for that reason that I only own the first two seasons of the show. I loved the whole show (except for the last season), but the first two seasons just rock.

I'm trying to think of other shows that did this back and forth thing and managed to have a decent show and an HEA. Usually the show--and the network's desire to keep raking in the cash--outlives the romance. Only shows like BSG and Roswell--where they know they're in the final season--have that kind of closure, I think. Farscape, too, gave that kind of closure through the TV movie, if I remember correctly. Any other ones? Suggestions? I feel like I'm missing an obvious one…)

Anyway, back to SCC and last night's episode, it nearly killed me when Cameron turned on them, damaged chip and all. I was worried we were going to spend the entire season with "bad" Cameron and that would have annoyed the crap out of me.

But I like the damaged chip aspect in that it now adds even more unpredictability to her behavior. IMO, she was always unpredictable because you don't know what she knows and what her exact objective is, other than keeping John alive.

The scene in which they've trapped Cameron between the two trucks and she's pleading with John not to take her chip out, that she loves him and he loves her…oh, boy, this is what I've been waiting for. *claps hands together gleefully*

Sarah tells him that it was all fake, that they're machines. They can't *feel* anything. It was manipulation, plain and simple. And it works because John gives her a second chance.

Interesting, because I don't recall any other terminator using emotions to lie this way.

Yes, they imitate other human beings through voice or physical appearance, but never as themselves. They did not seem sophisticated enough to carry off that kind of task, or else why wouldn't they (meaning SkyNet) send one with the intention of befriending John and Sarah only to turn when he/she is finally trusted? (Maybe they have! Derek, what exactly happened to you in that weird abandoned house last season? Hmmm...)

It brings up all kinds of delightful questions about how advanced Cameron really is she told him in the beginning that she is a more advanced model), why John in the Future (JitF!) chose to send her specifically back, and whether a machine is capable of expressing some form of humanity.

Her interest in ballet, for example. They made a big point of showing her practice this even after the mission for which that knowledge was required was over. And yes, I know, Summer Glau is a ballerina and they're making use of her skill set for the role, but I also feel like they may be exploring the boundaries of humanity and how we define it.

It also brings up this great point about love…last year in preparation for a book that I'm still thinking about writing, I bought this book called Love and Sex with Robots. It's non-fiction and the author's premise is that with the advances in technology now, it would be possible to create companions who would fill the role of spouse and partner. Programming is sophisticated enough, or will be, to simulate a human. And where do you draw the line?

We feel a certain way because our brain has been programmed to respond to certain stimuli, not all that different than a CPU.

Also, the author included some research about love that indicates we fall in love because of how we feel when we're around the other person. Your feelings for someone have more to do with how he/she makes you feel about yourself or in general than anything in particular about them. Isn't that interesting?

Therefore, I would posit that it is very possible to fall in love with a machine that protects you, helps you, looks after you and strongly resembles an attractive female in your age bracket. The question is, can the machine love you back? And how can you tell, what's "real" and what's "programmed"? Does it matter?

There's also the self-sacrifice issue too. When Cameron tells Sarah,"If that ever happens again, don't let him save me." That would indicate that her programming regarding John (the mission to protect him) are more of a priority than her own survival. She recognizes that she could be a danger to him and puts that before anything else. Another definition of love, perhaps…

LOVE this kind of stuff. LOVE IT.

Also, it was way cool to see the TX1000 or whatever the melty metal robot models are called. : )

Updated to add: Fixed the screwy paragraph spacing. Sorry about that. Also, I'm reading online that some are putting forth the theory that Cameron herself is the one who overrode the termination order rather than any preset programming, which would indicate some form of self-awareness and independence. Intriguing!

Monday, September 08, 2008

Fall has kicked me to ground and trod upon my head

I love fall. We're heading in to my favorite time of year. Crisp leaves, cool air, bright sunshine in an impossibly blue sky. Unfortunately, I seem to forget that, every few years, the season change kicks my a**.

 

Allergies and sinus issues run rampant in my family (A dentist, after reviewing my x-rays, said I had the largest sinuses she'd ever seen--gee, thanks?) and the second the weather changes and the barometric pressure shifts one way or another, I'm down and out for the count.

 

It's not every year, so it probably has something to do with the mold count or how fast the changes happen or something.

 

I've spent the last week with a splitting headache on the right side of my face, above and below my eye. Ugh. I laid around all weekend with tissues and over the counter medicine, hoping to knock this thing out. And I woke up this morning to find the pain gone…

 

Unfortunately, it had only relocated to the left side of my face.

 

*sigh*

 

I do not have time for this!

 

I'm teaching my first class at the College of Lake County this week on Thursday, and I'm still prepping my materials. I'm trying to make some forward progress on my very stubborn sequel to G&G. And I'm planning to spend the weekend at my friend and mentor, Linnea Sinclair's, house.

 

I cannot be on sinus medicine while I'm visiting Linnea--I will miss out on the Cosmos and that is simply not acceptable. : )  

 

So come on, head, hurry up and STOP hurting already.

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

College Admissions? Research help!

Anybody out there work in college admissions or know anything about it?
 
For a book, I need to know what would happen if someone didn't apply until April or May of his senior year.
 
I realize it probably depends on the school and the circumstances, but I'm just trying to get a vague idea whether it would be possible for a student with good grades, good ACT score, but no extra curriculars and some behavior issues to still get into a four-year school for fall semester if he applies so late. Would he be waitlisted? Considered for spring semester?
 
Also, while we're on this subject, what else do college admissions folks look for? I don't remember anymore! He'd have the grades and the scores, but there would be a lot of absences on his record. Notes about illnesses and incidents at his high school. Do colleges actually look at your "permanent record"? Would it be possible and/or ethical for the principal of said school to include a note about a student's difficulties when sending in the requested info to the college? 
 
Thanks for any help you out there in cyber-land can give!
 
: )

Monday, August 18, 2008

Austenland by Shannon Hale

Okay, Austenland is another fabulous book for Jane Austen fans, especially for those who are obsessed with Colin Firth's version of Mr. Darcy. I love the way it's written, and it's just a fun story. Basic premise is that there's a resort-type place that caters to the Austen-obsessed. If you can afford it, you spend two weeks at an English manor, following the customs of Austen's time with other participants and actors to play scripted roles. They even promise "romance." Our intrepid heroine, Jane Hayes (AKA Miss Erstwhile) has had less than ideal luck with men, some of which is due to her constant need to compare them to her ideal, Mr. Darcy. She longs to live during Jane Austen's time and find a man like Darcy.
 
A great-aunt bequeaths her this opportunity to visit Austenland, and the adventure begins. The situation is closely monitored [hence the Big Brother reference just below] by the actors, who are paid, and by a headmistress type person who insists on keeping everything as true to the time period as possible. No cell phones, no technology, no calling a woman by her first name...unless you're engaged. There are, thank goodness, certain allowances made for toilets and electric lights instead of kerosene lamps, but that's about it. And you can get kicked out for not following the "rules." It's like a reality show without the cameras.
 
My favorite line, and I don't think this is giving too much away, is the following, "In all the years Jane [our heroine] had fantasized about an Austenland, she never considered how, once inside its borders, she would feel like an outsider."  
 
Also, when she says, "If you're listening Big Brother, I refuse to be Fanny Price." Ha! I love that.
 
This is a great book for all Austen fans, particularly if you've picked apart the characters and know exactly who you would be (or would not be) if given the chance. I'm with Jane Hayes--I refuse to be Fanny Price.  : )

Friday, August 15, 2008

Writing about your exes

I'm listening to the latest Alanis album (thanks, Stacy G.), which I believe she has all but said is all about her break up with Ryan Reynolds, and wondering if he feels bad when he hears these songs on the radio and realizes how badly he made her feel. I mean, it's one thing to break up with your significant other, but to have to hear about it on the radio as you're driving to work? Or to have millions of other people hear it and know that it's about you? Some of these songs are devastatingly sad...and pissed off. They're very personal, too. You feel like you want to give her a hug and kick him in the shins.
 
I wonder if people give him dirty looks now. Didn't he break up with her to go out with some younger, blonder starlet? Can't remember who. (Ah, Scarlett Johanssen. Looked it up. ) Just remember wincing and thinking, "Ouch," on Alanis's behalf when I heard.
 
I guess I'm partial to her side of things ever since "You Ought to Know," the advent, in my opinion, of angry girl rock, and the first time I'd ever heard anyone describe in a song what it felt like to be dumped and the things you really think about during that time. (Even if it was supposedly about Dave Coulier, which I have trouble imagining).
 
These songs, too, hold that raw emotion that captivates me. I think she's at her best, songwriting-wise, when she's really hurt and really pissed. But what a way to be successful. Eeesh.
 
My favorites are "Not as We," "Straitjacket" and "Torch."

Thursday, August 14, 2008

An author by any other name...

Thinking about changing my name for my YA novels. It will still lead back to one website and everything, so it won't be one of those deep cover author names where you discover I'm an entirely different person after years of research and digging around in public records or whatever.
 
Current options being bandied about include:
 
Stacey Allen (real first, with husband's middle name in a different spelling)
 
Stacey Kade (close to my first choice, which is Stacey Kaye, but the website is already taken)
 
Stacia Kade (oooh, exotic)
 
It should be something:
-close to my real name (so I'll remember to answer to it),
-memorable,
-easy to spell and
-decent location on the shelf (so no Zee or anything like that).
 
What do you think? Suggestions welcome!

Wednesday, August 06, 2008

Movie and Books

Watched Stardust last night. I liked it better than I thought I would. I'm not much for the fantasy/magic/witches type stuff, but this was kind of fun. I'm intrigued enough to want to check out the book by Neil Gaiman. It was a fairy tale, essentially, and I love those! The dead princes/brothers as the peanut gallery cracked me up--I think that was my favorite part.
 
The young Dunstan at the beginning is Ben Barnes--he is cute!--and I realize now why he looked familiar. It's Prince Caspian. : ) I also see that they're making another of the Chronicles of Narnia movies. Dude...I so do not like those movies. *sigh* I know I should. They just...irritate me. What seems subtle and allegorical in the book just feels ham-handed and overplayed on the screen. Eeesh.
 
In my current quest to have enough books to build some large fortified structure with them (e.g., house, bridge, tower to outer space), I've added City of Bones and City of Ashes by Cassandra Clare to my shelves. Loved both of them and I'm waiting for the next one, of course.
 
I'm also reading Mystery Date, a collection of SF/F/Paranormal stories about dating. Some of them are romance and some of them are...not. So far, though, all of them are fun. What I like is that it harkens back to the day when maybe vampires, werewolves, Greek gods and such were not perhaps the best dating material. In fact, one might consider them possibly dangerous instead of, you know, all smoldering, intense and wounded beneath their tough Alpha male exterior. *snort* And yes, I know I'm just as guilty of that, too, though mine are aliens instead. : )

Monday, August 04, 2008

So...what did you all think?

Anybody out there finish Breaking Dawn yet? I dusted off my Harry Potter routine--buy enormous book and read in one day, despite other things that should be done.
 
What did you think?

Friday, August 01, 2008

Breaking Dawn tonight

Yep, I'm a sucker for a good midnight book release. Breaking Dawn, the fourth and final book in the Stephanie Meyer Twilight series, comes out tonight. And yeah, I'll be there. Typically, I like to give my money to the good folks at Barnes and Noble, especially in Vernon Hills, where I hang out at lunch. But my need for sleep and the distance between my favorite store and home are going to win out.
 
So, Borders in McHenry, it shall be.
 
I can't decide what I want to happen. I like Edward. I cried during New Moon when he was being all noble and self-sacrificing. But Bella has a much better chance at a "normal" life with Jacob. And I also think loving somebody so much, to the point where it's really sort of uneven, doesn't bode well for the future.
 
I know it's tantamount to heresy to say this about Bella and Edward, but I do think she'd be better off with Jacob, someone who makes her happy without demanding, even unintentionally, so much from her. But I also know that the heart wants what it wants (ever notice how people use that as an excuse to do some really questionable things?), and Bella and Edward are just one of those epic love stories.
 
Note, though, that we rarely see the people from those stories in ten or twenty years after they've gotten what they wanted beyond all else--each other. Does that passion still exist or does it become mundane? If it's the later, wouldn't it be better to be with the person who makes you happy rather than the one who makes you want to give up all else but him? Once you've got him, forever and ever, then what?
 
So, I just kind of wonder how the author is going to resolve this, and what message is really being sent. No matter what happens, some people are going to be disappointed, I think. Of course, that's true of just about every highly anticipated movie/book. I wonder why she introduced a secondary love interest when there never really seemed to be a moment in which she, Bella, would choose Jacob over Edward. Hmmm.
 
This musing brought to you by thirty-two year old Stacey, who, if she's honest with herself, knows she would picked Edward in a heartbeat (no pun intended) at eighteen.

Maybe I'm a cynic, but...

Most of these twenty things are really sweet...and yet some of them verge on creepy/stalker-ish. I supposed it's not creepy/stalker-ish if you love the person, but dude...if I came out to find a note under my windshield at work, I'd be like, why didn't you just come in and say hi to me? And don't even get me started with the idea of loading something onto my computer without telling me...oh, no. Not going to be pretty.

Thursday, July 31, 2008

New York, Day Three (part two) and Day Four

After our long journey back from Central Park, we took a quick nap and then got cleaned up for the wedding. I must confess I actually used one of the hotel provided shower caps for the first time in my life as I knew my hair would still be sopping wet if I shampooed again. It was funny and weird. I felt like Lucille Ball or something.

 

There was a shuttle to the wedding location in Queens, which was fortunate because I did not feel brave enough to face the subway again, especially in heels. The wedding was held in The Foundry, which is exactly what it sounds like, an old industrial-type building revitalized into this very cool open concept building. Seeing the heavy beams, old brick and odd little alcoves where the equipment must have been was neat. The back patio on the building held nursery plants, so it was beautiful and green.

 

The ceremony was lovely, just perfect. I really enjoyed the two poetry readings in the ceremony, which I believe were written specifically for the bride and groom. I actually teared up during the wedding, and I don't remember the last wedding that made me cry. : )

 

After the ceremony, we had drinking and dancing and dinner. The photo above is at dinner. We clean up pretty well, no? : )

 

Once dinner was finished, we had celebrated with more champagne (don't know what it was, but it was fabulous) and more dancing. I really had fun this time. It helped, knowing so many of people there.

 

At one point, Greg and I were demonstrating various 90's cheesy dancing techniques, like "churning the butter" and "mowing the lawn" just to be silly. The champagne definitely helped with that. My favorite part was seeing my in-laws "raising the roof" during "Jump Around" by House of Pain. They were awesome!

 

The bride and groom also provided these really cute Chinese-type slippers for those of us who wanted to kick off our heels and dance, which heck yeah, I did.

 

After cake and more dancing, an ice cream truck pulled up outside. Mr. Softee for everyone who wanted it! How cool is that?

 

I declined the ice cream but had a very enjoyable discussion with several of the other wedding guests about ice cream sandwiches and the proper cookie to ice cream ratio that must exist. : )

 

One final spin around the dance floor and then it was time to go. The shuttle had arrived to take us back to the hotel.

 

One funny/scary moment, our bus actually stopped dead on the bridge between Queens and Manhattan. Of course, some of us were, um, still feeling just how much we'd celebrated and found this more amusing than scary. But the bus driver got us up and moving again very shortly and all was well.  

 

Day Four

…is not very exciting, I'm afraid. We slept in. Brian and Susan were up and about and adventurous, but we were too tired. We did make it down to breakfast to talk to family a little more and say good-bye. But then it was all about getting packed and getting to the airport.

 

I was sad to leave. We don't get to see this part of the family very often. I only get to see my New York friends about once or twice a year. And I just had so much fun! : ) It was such an adventure, very different from chilling on the beach at Maui, but an altogether awesome experience. Thanks to everyone who offered advice and encouragement. You were right!

New York, Day Three (part one)

Day three, late nights and early mornings, we were starting to get a little tired. But we rolled out of bed to head for Rockefeller Center (photo at the top) to see if we could catch The Today Show and then line up for our NBC Studio Tour. (Thanks to sister-in-law Susan who did much of the organizing and planning for this trip--you rock!)

 

We missed The Today Show as they stopped filming early because it was a Saturday, but that was okay. We had plenty of time then to shop at the NBC store, where you can buy things like a talking bobble-head of Michael Scott from The Office, a t-shirt for Psych that reads, "Psychics do it in the future" and a BSG mug that quite simply states, "FRAK."

 

I would have loved to buy all of the above but instead settled for a small keychain for my sister who collects such things. Not much suitcase room, even less money!

 

The studio tour was really neat. We saw where they film the nightly news with Brian Williams. And it was a working studio. Behind the glass a few feet away, a reporter/anchor named Alex something (somebody want to help me out with her last name?) was giving a report on MSNBC.

 

We also saw the Saturday Night Live set, which actually didn't look like much. They had equipment and boxes all over the places for the Olympics. The show, obviously, is on hiatus until fall.

 

My favorite was the Conan O'Brien set. It was SO tiny. I know television uses all kinds of illusions and tricks, but this was ridiculously small compared to the cavernous space you feel like you see on screen every night. For those who watch the show, let me say this…the distance between Conan and Max, the drummer, is like five feet, maybe even less. Like I would be worried that Conan, during an enthusiastic arm wave, might knock into the drum set. That's how close they are.

 

But because they use individual reaction shots, Conan by himself and then Max or vice versa, it makes them seem very far apart. Same thing with the distance from the point where Conan does his monologue to the desk. Maybe ten feet apart.  Twenty might be pushing it. And yet if you watch the show, you know it seems to take him a long time to get over there. Just another illusion, folks.

 

The set furniture is also really small, to match the scale of the set. Our tour guides, the adorably named Margo and Carly, said standard living room furniture would look huge. So, beware of anyone who looks tall on the show! They're probably not. I also wonder if this is part of what's behind the running joke about Conan being freakishly tall, as he frequently mentions on the show. I'm sure he is tall. I'm even more sure he looks gigantic because of the set.

 

Also, the set itself is curved, no hard angles. That's so you won't have any depth perception and be able to tell exactly how small the studio is. Interesting, right?

 

 After the tour, we headed to the Carnegie Deli, only to find a huge line and a menu that included too many mentions of "tongue" for us to be comfortable eating there. So, instead we went to Lindy's. It was horribly expensive, but I must admit that I liked my sandwich and Greg's soup was really good. For the money, though, Junior's was better. (Trump Tower, we would discover later, offered a three course meal--appetizer, main course and dessert--for $22. Donald, I have new respect for you, offering decently priced food in New York City.)

 

We decided then to brave the walk to Central Park (photo at the top). It was so cool. It make sense that you would have to have something like this for all the dogs, kids and frisbee players that must live in the area. Still, it was a bit odd to see so many people staking out little patches of ground with their blankets and accoutrements. It sort of looks like what you'd see before a fireworks display on the 4th, only no fireworks.

 

That was, I think, my favorite part, walking all the way to the park. Of course, then we had to walk alllllll the way back. Even in my comfy chucks, my feet were hurting aplenty by the time we made it, but it was worth it. After this, we had the wedding, but I'm going to save that for my next, and probably last NY trip-related post. :)  

New York, Day Two

Okay, so here's where things got a little nerve-wracking. On Friday, I went my own direction while everyone else went theirs.

 

Greg, his parents, and Brian and Susan all went on the Grayline Tour to see some of New York's most famous sites.

 

I left to meet my editor from Hyperion for the first time. I was SO nervous. I left the hotel at 9:07 for a 10:00 a.m. meeting based on the front desk's warning that there might be heavy traffic. I arrived at our meeting place at 9:22. Good grief. Fortunately, I noticed there was a Barnes and Noble on the corner, so I went in to shop and kill some time.

 

It was an interesting experience. The store reminded me of our college bookstore, all crowded shelves and things in odd places. It wasn't the sleek, stand-alone structure I'm used to seeing in the Chicago area. It was like a rabbit warren with all these little rooms kind of stuck on to each other and alcoves full of books. It was cool.

 

I headed back then to the City Bakery and read for a few minutes. My editor arrived, and we had a great time talking about everything from books to our favorite television shows. He is awesome and I can't wait to work with him! : )

 

After that, feeling quite confident in myself, I hailed a cab on my own and gave directions to the hotel (Madison and 21st, please). Of course, I immediately failed the next test when the cabbie asked me if I wanted him to take twenty-third all the way. I had no idea and was forced to confess so. But it was all good. I made it back eventually, probably in a more roundabout way than if I were a native, but oh, well.

 

After dropping off stuff at the hotel, I walked the block to Grand Central to meet my friend Stacey Agdern for lunch. She's a bookseller in Grand Central as well as a writer, so we just grabbed a quick bite to eat while she was on lunch break. We chatted about writing and books and about the possibility of RT next year.

 

When Stacey went back to work, I headed back to the hotel. I should have taken a nap, but I was way too keyed up. So I headed up to the rooftop garden bar on the hotel (picture at the top). It was beautiful and warm up there. I wrote for a bit. Then I went for a walk around the block and checked in with my folks on my cell phone.

 

At four, I went back over to Grand Central and met Stacey again. I was about to take my inaugural subway ride to see a mutual friend and she, thank goodness, agreed to come with me. The subway system, to me as an outsider, seems very confusing. Trains are identified by both letters and numbers, and I can't quite get a fix on how everything comes together. Chicago's color coded system seems much easier.

 

So, we found our way to Queens and our friend Isabo Kelly, to see her and her new baby, Jack. Both are doing well, and Jack is SO adorable. Lots of hair, and he's holding his head up like a champ after only two weeks.

 

We met up with another friend and author, Leanna Renee Hieber, at Isabo's house, and after a short visit with the new mom and baby, I had to head back to Manhattan for the rehearsal/welcome dinner. Thankfully both Stacey and Leanna agreed to chaperone me all the way back to Grand Central, even though it was out of their way. Thanks, you guys!

 

I raced the block back to the hotel, and I do mean raced. The family was supposed to meet at 7:30 in the lobby for a shuttle (or so I thought) and it was 7:22 by the time I walked out the door of Grand Central.

 

I got to the hotel, out of breath and sweaty (ew!), but no one was down in the lobby. I made it up to our room and found Greg just getting dressed. Apparently, I'd gotten my days mixed up for the shuttle, which was actually going to be Saturday, and they'd all just gotten finished with the wine and cheese hour.

 

Whew. So, I freshened up and then we took a cab over to the dinner location. In the cab, we had our first what I would call stereotypical NY experience. A woman started to walk in front of the moving cab. Our cabbie honked at her. She gave him the finger. He gave it back. She kicked the cab as we pulled away. Yeah. : )

 

Dinner was fabulous and so much fun! Even though most of us were staying the same hotel, we hadn't all seen each other yet. So it was great to be able to catch up, laugh and share stories. Greg's uncle, father of the groom, had put together this great presentation about the family, traditions, history, fun stuff. It was cool to see the old pictures and nice to be included in some of the more recent ones as well!

 

After dinner, we relocated back to the hotel and headed up to the rooftop bar again. It was really beautiful at night. Full of scammers, too. : ) Older business-type gentlemen hitting on girls young enough to be their daughters. Yeah, we had fun watching that. The girls kept pumping them for drinks and then…went home for the evening. Ha.

 

Feeling full from good food and drink and fabulous company, we finally dragged ourselves off to bed at about 12:30.